Two of the 64,000
dwt vessels are contracted jointly with Nihon Shipyard and Imabari
Shipbuilding, and the other two newbuilds are agreed with Japanese trading
house Mitsui & Co. The ships are
priced at $46.5m each.
The dual-fuel
engines will make the new ultramaxes capable of running on both conventional
fuel oil and biofuel as well as green methanol, which, when produced using
sustainable feedstocks and renewable energy, will generate emissions that can be classified as ‘low carbon’ or even
‘net zero’ on a lifecycle basis, Pacific Basin noted.
The company has
worked with Nihon Shipyard on the vessel design and construction since May 2022, while its collaboration with Mitsui looked into
alternative fuel bunkering options and associated infrastructure.
The Martin
Fruergaard-led handysize and supramax specialist, with a fleet of nearly 300
ships, said it has entered into a memorandum of understanding with Mitsui that
will give it access to volumes of green
methanol that will enable the newbuilds and, through emissions pooling, its
other conventionally-fuelled vessels, to comply with and even benefit from
coming FuelEU Maritime rules and expected IMO global greenhouse gas fuel
standard rules.
The company added
it is also in talks with several green fuel suppliers and producers to develop
its access to bio-methanol and e-methanol, as well as biofuel.
“Ordering these
vessels aligns with our longstanding initiative to develop commercially viable
and efficient dual-fuel low-emission vessels, and represents a major milestone
in our long-term plan to transition to net zero emissions by 2050,” said
Pacific Basin chief executive Fruergaard.
Although the
newbuilding move comes after many years, Pacific Basin awaits the arrival of
the first of four long-term chartered 64,000 dwt ultramax newbuilds and the
third of four newbuild and chartered-in handies in the fourth quarter of this
year, all with purchase options attached. The
company also has options to further optimise its owned fleet with four
Japanese-built handies next year.
“With this
newbuilding order, we are creating significant growth optionality for Pacific
Basin, enabling growth through additional ‘low-emission vessels’ newbuilding
orders and/or long-term charters of newbuildings with purchase options, while
maintaining discipline in our acquisition of high-quality modern secondhand
handysize, supramax and ultramax vessels to renew our fleet while selling older
and less efficient handysize vessels,” Fruergaard added.
Earlier this month,
another go-to yard in Japan for methanol-powered bulkers, Tsuneishi, launched
what it claims to be the world’s first methanol dual-fuelled 65,700 dwt
ultramax.